Teach Middle East Magazine May-June 2019 Issue 5 Volume 6 | Page 15

Sharing Good Practice optimal practice to foster children’s creativity and innovation, but the rates of “outstanding” schools are dropping year on year with only 14 in 2018. There are fewer than 30,000 students of an estimated 250,000 in Dubai, having access to Outstanding education. Where are we going wrong? The move toward social learning has long been championed by the beacons of educational excellence like Finland, Switzerland, Ireland for decades and is proving successful with long term national benefits like improved life expectancy, increased employment, improved satisfaction ratings - to mention but a few. So what does social learning look like? Social learning can happen anywhere form early childhood to old age. Social learning equips us with the intellectual resources to think critically and deeply about what we are doing. It encourages us to engage with our peers in dialogue and collaborative knowledge building. Fostering the ability to be philosophical. We need to encourage mindfulness, thinking about thinking. Reasoning as to the greater purpose of our activities. Social learning involves growing the capacity for risk and uncertainty. If you enter a kindergarten classroom you find children who are constantly engaged in trial and error, investigating their surroundings and the tools they find all around them - enter a senior classroom and this is all but lost. Enter the majority of offices in the UAE and it is nowhere to be found. “If you double the number of experiments you do each year, you double your inventiveness” Jeff Bezos. Why aren’t we taking more risks at work? Is it the fear of losing our job - losing valuable time - losing respect? Social learning involves careful institutional design to counter these fears. Montessori pioneered one of the first formal attempts at social learning in education in the 1900s - a child centered approach based on discovery learning. This has been modified with the British Early Years curriculum and is developing with the American common core and the IB curriculums. But this isn’t far enough! We need to encourage primary, secondary, university students to think about thinking - to become practiced at understanding how we learn not just what we learn. We need to build this into the workplace too. Create spaces for investigation, collaboration and possibly most importantly - failure. Providing opportunity to take risks, to fail and to try again is paramount. Be prepared for the unexpected, only then can we foster innovation, only then can we meet the goals of our nation and move toward the demands of a new existence in a future that is fast approaching. “One still must have chaos in oneself to give birth to a dancing star” Friedrich Nietzche Catherine O’Farrell (PGCBA, BSc-Psych, B-Ed) is an experienced psychologist & consultant. She has worked in educational and medical institutions across Ireland, the UK, Australia and the UAE for over 15 years. She is currently Group Head for Athena Group in Dubai and Director of Phase 2 for the Dubai Inclusion Network. Class Time | | May - Jun 2019 | 15